It's rare to have Rep. John Conyers
(Detroit) and Rev. Al Sharpton (Heaven?) publicly split against each other, but
a recently-passed bill (H.R. 848), championed by Conyers, just accomplished
that. The "Performance Rights Act" has created a full-blown
spectacle, even enlisting the megaphone of media mogul, Cathy Hughes, who
called it a "bill that could put many black owned radio stations out of
business. And force others to abandon their commitment to provide free music,
entertainment, news, information, and money losing formats like gospel and
black talk." In recent weeks, many, including the inimitable Dick Gregory,
Rev. Jesse Jackson and Tom Joyner, have rallied in opposition to it.The bill passed last Wednesday in
the House, but not before a rally organized by Ms. Hughes, herself, outside
Conyers' office. It should be duly noted that H.R.
848 didn't just spring up like a thief in the night. For months it had been in
the works, and for months, faithful public servants like award-winning Hip-Hop
journalist, Davey D, had been raising their voices against the dangers it could
cause--to Black radio.
As early as January 27, 2009, Davey D had begun sounding the
alarm. By February 24, he was convinced that if Conyers
greased the wheels for the passage of the bill, "He and his collogues will
be regretting their shortsightedness... Conyers and his ilk will one day sadly
discover that those outlets will not be able to accommodate them in an
effective way because many outlets like mine play music with our talk." At
the time, Davey D speculated that perhaps the "esteemed Congressman has
been duped and bamboozled. Someone on his staff has given him bad
information"; but many of Conyers' opponents aren't so willing to give him
that much credit anymore.
Davey D explained, in plain English,
the content and character of Conyers' handiwork. It's worth quoting at-length:
If this goes through, what will
essentially happen is that we will find ourselves in a situation where it will
become real costly to play music. This new coalition is really the same outfit
that went and gutted internet radio making it so it costs 18 cent a song per
listener. Do the math and ask yourself why we don't have more stations? It's
too damn expensive after you reach a certain amount of listeners. The rate is
scheduled to go up to 25 cent a song per listener in 3 years.. This means if
you have something cracking and you get even half a million listeners it will
be impossible for you to pay for it, even with advertising.<
But as much as we've been alerted to
the danger involved in a potential loss of this vibrant part of our culture, we
must be just as willing to question if this effort, on the part of executives
like Cathy Hughes, is even worth it. We should also demand from them what their
true motive, in this fight, is. After all, Cathy Hughes, as founder and CEO of
Radio One, hasn't been so beneficial to the younger Black community. In 2007, Jahi, the California-based
Hip-Hop artist, asked a timely question:
"When will Radio One be held accountable for the music they are feeding to
our kids, matter of fact, all of us?" Jahi railed against Radio One and
Cathy Hughes for promoting a Spring Fest Miami concert series, with artists
whose only prerogatives seem to be the pursuit of material wealth and other
self-destructive acquisitions. Jahi felt that as much as Don Imus, the disgrace
radio jock, was tossed into the lion's den for his "nappy-headed
hoes" comment, and justly so, the Black Imus-lites on the airwaves
should be met with equal amounts of antagonism, from an irate community:
"The date after the controversy broke, I heard an artist say
"beautiful hoe's" on the radio (RADIO ONE). Yeah they bleeped out
"hoes" but we all know what was said. What does Radio One and Kathy
Hughes have to say about that?"
Jahi has a valid point; but the
question, in my view, should be broadened and more inclusive: "What do WE,
as a people, as a generation, as a culture, have to say about that?" If we'll be frank, and I certainly
hope we can, most of what is played on Black or "urban" radio
stations across the country is unadulterated bullsh**! Bullsh** in perpetuity..
The same hedonistic, materialistic, misogynistic set of 5 - 10 songs is rotated
by slow-witted DJ's, whose sole claim to fame is the ability to read
scripts--pre-written by record label executives--about how "ill,"
"hot," "siccckkk," "phat," "dope," and
"crack," a select few of commercial artists are. These fu**ed-up "on-air
personalities" couldn't care less what impact their role is having on the
collective psyche of the Hip-Hop community. They take pride and joy in a job
which trained-robots and machines can do effortlessly and, dare I add, more
eloquently. These backbone-less puppets have no depth into which their
integrity refuses to dive--as long as the promise of financial solvency abounds.
Anyone who doubts the verity of my contention need only switch their radio
frequencies to any station with the title "Hot" or "Power"
before it. SOURCE:THE DAILY VOICE
Comments
Is Black Radio Worth Saving?
It's rare to have Rep. John Conyers
(Detroit) and Rev. Al Sharpton (Heaven?) publicly split against each other, but
a recently-passed bill (H.R. 848), championed by Conyers, just accomplished
that. The "Performance Rights Act" has created a full-blown
spectacle, even enlisting the megaphone of media mogul, Cathy Hughes, who
called it a "bill that could put many black owned radio stations out of
business. And force others to abandon their commitment to provide free music,
entertainment, news, information, and money losing formats like gospel and
black talk." In recent weeks, many, including the inimitable Dick Gregory,
Rev. Jesse Jackson and Tom Joyner, have rallied in opposition to it.The bill passed last Wednesday in
the House, but not before a rally organized by Ms. Hughes, herself, outside
Conyers' office. It should be duly noted that H.R.
848 didn't just spring up like a thief in the night. For months it had been in
the works, and for months, faithful public servants like award-winning Hip-Hop
journalist, Davey D, had been raising their voices against the dangers it could
cause--to Black radio.
As early as January 27, 2009, Davey D had begun sounding the
alarm. By February 24, he was convinced that if Conyers
greased the wheels for the passage of the bill, "He and his collogues will
be regretting their shortsightedness... Conyers and his ilk will one day sadly
discover that those outlets will not be able to accommodate them in an
effective way because many outlets like mine play music with our talk." At
the time, Davey D speculated that perhaps the "esteemed Congressman has
been duped and bamboozled. Someone on his staff has given him bad
information"; but many of Conyers' opponents aren't so willing to give him
that much credit anymore.
Davey D explained, in plain English,
the content and character of Conyers' handiwork. It's worth quoting at-length:
If this goes through, what will
essentially happen is that we will find ourselves in a situation where it will
become real costly to play music. This new coalition is really the same outfit
that went and gutted internet radio making it so it costs 18 cent a song per
listener. Do the math and ask yourself why we don't have more stations? It's
too damn expensive after you reach a certain amount of listeners. The rate is
scheduled to go up to 25 cent a song per listener in 3 years.. This means if
you have something cracking and you get even half a million listeners it will
be impossible for you to pay for it, even with advertising.<
But as much as we've been alerted to
the danger involved in a potential loss of this vibrant part of our culture, we
must be just as willing to question if this effort, on the part of executives
like Cathy Hughes, is even worth it. We should also demand from them what their
true motive, in this fight, is. After all, Cathy Hughes, as founder and CEO of
Radio One, hasn't been so beneficial to the younger Black community. In 2007, Jahi, the California-based
Hip-Hop artist, asked a timely question:
"When will Radio One be held accountable for the music they are feeding to
our kids, matter of fact, all of us?" Jahi railed against Radio One and
Cathy Hughes for promoting a Spring Fest Miami concert series, with artists
whose only prerogatives seem to be the pursuit of material wealth and other
self-destructive acquisitions. Jahi felt that as much as Don Imus, the disgrace
radio jock, was tossed into the lion's den for his "nappy-headed
hoes" comment, and justly so, the Black Imus-lites on the airwaves
should be met with equal amounts of antagonism, from an irate community:
"The date after the controversy broke, I heard an artist say
"beautiful hoe's" on the radio (RADIO ONE). Yeah they bleeped out
"hoes" but we all know what was said. What does Radio One and Kathy
Hughes have to say about that?"
Jahi has a valid point; but the
question, in my view, should be broadened and more inclusive: "What do WE,
as a people, as a generation, as a culture, have to say about that?" If we'll be frank, and I certainly
hope we can, most of what is played on Black or "urban" radio
stations across the country is unadulterated bullsh**! Bullsh** in perpetuity..
The same hedonistic, materialistic, misogynistic set of 5 - 10 songs is rotated
by slow-witted DJ's, whose sole claim to fame is the ability to read
scripts--pre-written by record label executives--about how "ill,"
"hot," "siccckkk," "phat," "dope," and
"crack," a select few of commercial artists are. These fu**ed-up "on-air
personalities" couldn't care less what impact their role is having on the
collective psyche of the Hip-Hop community. They take pride and joy in a job
which trained-robots and machines can do effortlessly and, dare I add, more
eloquently. These backbone-less puppets have no depth into which their
integrity refuses to dive--as long as the promise of financial solvency abounds.
Anyone who doubts the verity of my contention need only switch their radio
frequencies to any station with the title "Hot" or "Power"
before it. SOURCE:THE DAILY VOICE
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Is Black Radio Worth Saving?
It's rare to have Rep. John Conyers (Detroit) and Rev. Al Sharpton (Heaven?) publicly split against each other, but a recently-passed bill (H.R. 848), championed by Conyers, just accomplished that. The "Performance Rights Act" has created a full-blown spectacle, even enlisting the megaphone of media mogul, Cathy Hughes, who called it a "bill that could put many black owned radio stations out of business. And force others to abandon their commitment to provide free music, entertainment, news, information, and money losing formats like gospel and black talk." In recent weeks, many, including the inimitable Dick Gregory, Rev. Jesse Jackson and Tom Joyner, have rallied in opposition to it.The bill passed last Wednesday in the House, but not before a rally organized by Ms. Hughes, herself, outside Conyers' office. It should be duly noted that H.R. 848 didn't just spring up like a thief in the night. For months it had been in the works, and for months, faithful public servants like award-winning Hip-Hop journalist, Davey D, had been raising their voices against the dangers it could cause--to Black radio.
As early as January 27, 2009, Davey D had begun sounding the alarm. By February 24, he was convinced that if Conyers greased the wheels for the passage of the bill, "He and his collogues will be regretting their shortsightedness... Conyers and his ilk will one day sadly discover that those outlets will not be able to accommodate them in an effective way because many outlets like mine play music with our talk." At the time, Davey D speculated that perhaps the "esteemed Congressman has been duped and bamboozled. Someone on his staff has given him bad information"; but many of Conyers' opponents aren't so willing to give him that much credit anymore.
Davey D explained, in plain English, the content and character of Conyers' handiwork. It's worth quoting at-length:
But as much as we've been alerted to the danger involved in a potential loss of this vibrant part of our culture, we must be just as willing to question if this effort, on the part of executives like Cathy Hughes, is even worth it. We should also demand from them what their true motive, in this fight, is. After all, Cathy Hughes, as founder and CEO of Radio One, hasn't been so beneficial to the younger Black community. In 2007, Jahi, the California-based Hip-Hop artist, asked a timely question: "When will Radio One be held accountable for the music they are feeding to our kids, matter of fact, all of us?" Jahi railed against Radio One and Cathy Hughes for promoting a Spring Fest Miami concert series, with artists whose only prerogatives seem to be the pursuit of material wealth and other self-destructive acquisitions. Jahi felt that as much as Don Imus, the disgrace radio jock, was tossed into the lion's den for his "nappy-headed hoes" comment, and justly so, the Black Imus-lites on the airwaves should be met with equal amounts of antagonism, from an irate community: "The date after the controversy broke, I heard an artist say "beautiful hoe's" on the radio (RADIO ONE). Yeah they bleeped out "hoes" but we all know what was said. What does Radio One and Kathy Hughes have to say about that?"
Jahi has a valid point; but the question, in my view, should be broadened and more inclusive: "What do WE, as a people, as a generation, as a culture, have to say about that?" If we'll be frank, and I certainly hope we can, most of what is played on Black or "urban" radio stations across the country is unadulterated bullsh**! Bullsh** in perpetuity.. The same hedonistic, materialistic, misogynistic set of 5 - 10 songs is rotated by slow-witted DJ's, whose sole claim to fame is the ability to read scripts--pre-written by record label executives--about how "ill," "hot," "siccckkk," "phat," "dope," and "crack," a select few of commercial artists are. These fu**ed-up "on-air personalities" couldn't care less what impact their role is having on the collective psyche of the Hip-Hop community. They take pride and joy in a job which trained-robots and machines can do effortlessly and, dare I add, more eloquently. These backbone-less puppets have no depth into which their integrity refuses to dive--as long as the promise of financial solvency abounds. Anyone who doubts the verity of my contention need only switch their radio frequencies to any station with the title "Hot" or "Power" before it. SOURCE:THE DAILY VOICE
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